Life-Threatening Arrhythmias: Evaluation, Identification, and Assessment
Peter J. Kudenchuk
If a patient is pulseless or in shock, a wide-complex tachycardia is best presumed to be ventricular tachycardia (VT) until proved otherwise. In a study of patients who presented with a wide-QRS-complex tachycardia, if they said yes to two questions (“Have you ever had a heart attack in the past?” and “Did [these kind of symptoms] start after your heart attack?”) VT was the culprit arrhythmia in nearly all (28 of 29) cases.
Evaluation and assessment of patients with life-threatening arrhythmias
Diagnostic clues in the 12-lead electrocardiogram
Triggers for actions and interventions
Knowing when to call expert consultation for complicated rhythm interpretation or pharmacologic or management decisions
Evaluation of the Arrhythmia Patient
Basic Principles
Cardiac arrhythmias present with a wide variety of symptoms, including palpitations, chest discomfort, dyspnea, dizziness, confusion, syncope, as well as unheralded collapse (cardiac arrest). These symptoms may be intermittent when caused by self-terminating (paroxysmal) arrhythmias and can range in severity from bothersome but not necessarily life-threatening to catastrophic, requiring immediate intervention. The initial assessment of an arrhythmia should focus on the patient, her or his clinical status, and whether there is time to establish a rhythm diagnosis before treatment or before moving to immediate lifesaving measures—cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and electrical cardioversion or defibrillation—in the case of someone who is unconscious, markedly hypotensive, or pulseless.
In presentations with a wide complex tachycardia (WCT), the hemodynamic stability (or instability) of the patient is singularly unhelpful in discriminating whether it represents a supraventricular or a ventricular tachycardia.1 Typically heart rate, not the supraventricular or ventricular etiology of the arrhythmia, is the single most important determinant of
symptoms and their severity. From a hemodynamic standpoint, arrhythmias are also generally better tolerated among patients with better underlying heart function than in those whose ventricular function is significantly impaired.
symptoms and their severity. From a hemodynamic standpoint, arrhythmias are also generally better tolerated among patients with better underlying heart function than in those whose ventricular function is significantly impaired.
History
A brief history focused on whether the patient has heart disease can be revealing. Ventricular arrhythmias predominate in patients with known structural heart disease as well in as older adults with other risk factors for heart disease. Supraventricular arrhythmias tend to be more common in younger, healthier patients and in those in whom arrhythmias may have preceded their development of heart disease. In a study of conscious patients who presented with a wide-QRS-complex tachycardia, an affirmative answer to two questions addressing these issues (“Have you ever had a heart attack in the past?” and “Did [these kind of symptoms] start after your heart attack?”) correctly identified VT as the culprit arrhythmia in nearly all (28 of 29) cases.1 Comparison of a prior ECG (if available) with an ECG of the current arrhythmia can also be quite helpful.
In a study of conscious patients who presented with a wide-QRS-complex tachycardia, an affirmative answer to two questions (“Have you ever had a heart attack in the past?” and “Did [these kind of symptoms] start after your heart attack?”) correctly identified VT as the culprit arrhythmia in nearly all (28 of 29) cases.
Physical Examination
The physical examination of patients in arrhythmia should initially assess for signs of hemodynamic instability or evidence that the arrhythmia is being poorly tolerated, including level of consciousness, heart rate, and blood pressure, followed by evidence of heightened sympathetic drive, including skin pallor, cool extremities, and diaphoresis. Auscultation of lung fields may reveal diffuse crackles suggestive of pulmonary edema. The pulse may be regular, irregularly irregular, thready, or absent. Variability in the intensity of the first heart sound (S1) and cannon “A” waves in the jugular pulse are highly sensitive and specific indications of atrioventricular dissociation associated VT. Although these signs are helpful when detected, very often the rapid ventricular rate precludes making a rhythm diagnosis on the basis of physical findings alone. Documenting the rhythm through rhythm monitoring or an electrocardiogram (ECG) is required.
Electrocardiogram
ECG monitoring should be instituted as soon as possible, ideally simultaneous with the initial assessment of the patient. In emergent or semiemergent circumstances, this can be done most efficiently by applying defibrillation electrodes (from which the ECG can be monitored) or by use of the “quick-look paddles” feature available on most conventional defibrillators. Early ECG monitoring is also important in high-risk patients, such as those with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) or severe ischemia. Because the greatest risk for serious arrhythmias exists during the first hour after onset of symptoms of infarction or ischemia, health care professionals should start cardiac monitoring as soon as possible.
All ECG and rhythm information should be interpreted in context of other available information about the patient, including ventilation, oxygenation, heart rate, blood pressure, level of consciousness, acid-base status, and medication use. In specific clinical settings, care providers should consider possible aggravation of arrhythmias by antiarrhythmic drugs (proarrhythmia), adverse drug effects from intentional or unintentional overdose, or drug toxicity occurring with normal dosing patterns or as a result of drug-drug interactions.
With these principles in mind, care providers should:
Recognize the symptoms and signs requiring immediate treatment of the patient with cardioversion or defibrillation.
Understand the initial diagnostic, electrical, and pharmacologic treatment approaches for rhythms that are hemodynamically unstable and those that are not.
Know when to call expert consultation for complicated rhythm interpretation or pharmacologic or management decisions.
Providers of acute cardial life support (ACLS) should also participate in training and evaluation sessions that will establish their ability to detect and treat serious arrhythmias, including regular updates to enhance their expertise in rhythm interpretation and in using and troubleshooting ECG monitoring equipment.
Arrhythmia Recognition and Classification
Advanced providers and professionals should be able to distinguish true arrhythmias from normal heart rhythms occurring at other than usual rates and from fictitious arrhythmias. Patients in acute distress are likely to manifest normal rhythms at more rapid rates, which should not be confused with a primary arrhythmia unless the rate is not appropriate for the clinical situation. Confusion can sometimes occur when the heart rate is sufficiently rapid that the P wave blends into the preceding T wave, making it difficult to see and, therefore, difficult to distinguish a supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) from what is simply sinus tachycardia. Obtaining a 12-lead ECG in this instance can be helpful because P waves may be more easily distinguished in some leads than in others, making the rhythm diagnosis more apparent.
Obtaining a 12-lead ECG can be helpful because P waves may be more easily distinguished in some leads than in others, making the rhythm diagnosis more apparent.
The following rhythms should be recognized by experienced health care professionals:
Sinus rhythm (including sinus bradycardia and sinus tachycardia)
Sinus pause and arrest
Atrioventricular (AV) blocks of all degrees
Premature atrial complexes (PACs)
Supraventricular tachycardia (SVT)
Preexcited arrhythmias (associated with an accessory pathway)
Premature ventricular complexes (PVCs)
Ventricular tachycardia (VT)
Ventricular fibrillation (VF)
Ventricular asystole
Accelerated idioventricular rhythm